Do you know any SQLite visual develoment tool?











up vote
17
down vote

favorite
3












Do you know about any visual development tool such as Microsoft Access or FileMaker but that uses SQlite as database engine?



I'm looking for a Windows desktop software (or easy programming language) with which I can build a database application that uses SQLite.



Thank you.










share|improve this question
























  • Please note that MS Access is not just a "database browser/UI". I doubt there is anything like it, although there are plenty of "database browser/UI" applications that support SQLite. (I have no idea what FileMaker is.)
    – user166390
    Nov 6 '11 at 18:34












  • Yes you are right 'pst'. In fact I'm not looking for a SQLite manager I know there are plenty. I'm looking for a visual development tool for SQLite AS Access. FileMaker is the Apple side of 'Access'.
    – Nicero
    Nov 6 '11 at 18:56










  • It's 2016. In my opinion, this has a better, more recent answer here: softwarerecs.stackexchange.com/questions/1057/sqlite-gui-editor
    – knb
    Oct 18 '16 at 12:17

















up vote
17
down vote

favorite
3












Do you know about any visual development tool such as Microsoft Access or FileMaker but that uses SQlite as database engine?



I'm looking for a Windows desktop software (or easy programming language) with which I can build a database application that uses SQLite.



Thank you.










share|improve this question
























  • Please note that MS Access is not just a "database browser/UI". I doubt there is anything like it, although there are plenty of "database browser/UI" applications that support SQLite. (I have no idea what FileMaker is.)
    – user166390
    Nov 6 '11 at 18:34












  • Yes you are right 'pst'. In fact I'm not looking for a SQLite manager I know there are plenty. I'm looking for a visual development tool for SQLite AS Access. FileMaker is the Apple side of 'Access'.
    – Nicero
    Nov 6 '11 at 18:56










  • It's 2016. In my opinion, this has a better, more recent answer here: softwarerecs.stackexchange.com/questions/1057/sqlite-gui-editor
    – knb
    Oct 18 '16 at 12:17















up vote
17
down vote

favorite
3









up vote
17
down vote

favorite
3






3





Do you know about any visual development tool such as Microsoft Access or FileMaker but that uses SQlite as database engine?



I'm looking for a Windows desktop software (or easy programming language) with which I can build a database application that uses SQLite.



Thank you.










share|improve this question















Do you know about any visual development tool such as Microsoft Access or FileMaker but that uses SQlite as database engine?



I'm looking for a Windows desktop software (or easy programming language) with which I can build a database application that uses SQLite.



Thank you.







sqlite






share|improve this question















share|improve this question













share|improve this question




share|improve this question








edited Dec 16 '11 at 4:19









Joel Coehoorn

303k94489717




303k94489717










asked Nov 6 '11 at 18:26









Nicero

1,51742040




1,51742040












  • Please note that MS Access is not just a "database browser/UI". I doubt there is anything like it, although there are plenty of "database browser/UI" applications that support SQLite. (I have no idea what FileMaker is.)
    – user166390
    Nov 6 '11 at 18:34












  • Yes you are right 'pst'. In fact I'm not looking for a SQLite manager I know there are plenty. I'm looking for a visual development tool for SQLite AS Access. FileMaker is the Apple side of 'Access'.
    – Nicero
    Nov 6 '11 at 18:56










  • It's 2016. In my opinion, this has a better, more recent answer here: softwarerecs.stackexchange.com/questions/1057/sqlite-gui-editor
    – knb
    Oct 18 '16 at 12:17




















  • Please note that MS Access is not just a "database browser/UI". I doubt there is anything like it, although there are plenty of "database browser/UI" applications that support SQLite. (I have no idea what FileMaker is.)
    – user166390
    Nov 6 '11 at 18:34












  • Yes you are right 'pst'. In fact I'm not looking for a SQLite manager I know there are plenty. I'm looking for a visual development tool for SQLite AS Access. FileMaker is the Apple side of 'Access'.
    – Nicero
    Nov 6 '11 at 18:56










  • It's 2016. In my opinion, this has a better, more recent answer here: softwarerecs.stackexchange.com/questions/1057/sqlite-gui-editor
    – knb
    Oct 18 '16 at 12:17


















Please note that MS Access is not just a "database browser/UI". I doubt there is anything like it, although there are plenty of "database browser/UI" applications that support SQLite. (I have no idea what FileMaker is.)
– user166390
Nov 6 '11 at 18:34






Please note that MS Access is not just a "database browser/UI". I doubt there is anything like it, although there are plenty of "database browser/UI" applications that support SQLite. (I have no idea what FileMaker is.)
– user166390
Nov 6 '11 at 18:34














Yes you are right 'pst'. In fact I'm not looking for a SQLite manager I know there are plenty. I'm looking for a visual development tool for SQLite AS Access. FileMaker is the Apple side of 'Access'.
– Nicero
Nov 6 '11 at 18:56




Yes you are right 'pst'. In fact I'm not looking for a SQLite manager I know there are plenty. I'm looking for a visual development tool for SQLite AS Access. FileMaker is the Apple side of 'Access'.
– Nicero
Nov 6 '11 at 18:56












It's 2016. In my opinion, this has a better, more recent answer here: softwarerecs.stackexchange.com/questions/1057/sqlite-gui-editor
– knb
Oct 18 '16 at 12:17






It's 2016. In my opinion, this has a better, more recent answer here: softwarerecs.stackexchange.com/questions/1057/sqlite-gui-editor
– knb
Oct 18 '16 at 12:17














8 Answers
8






active

oldest

votes

















up vote
7
down vote













There's a list of them at http://www.sqlite.org/cvstrac/wiki?p=ManagementTools






share|improve this answer

















  • 2




    Thank you rushman, but I'm not looking for a SQLite manager. I'm looking for a visual depelopment tools as Microsoft Access.
    – Nicero
    Nov 6 '11 at 18:53










  • I think the title of the article I provided my be misleading. SQLite Maestro seems to be a complete development tool as well as a management tool, for instance.
    – rushman
    Nov 6 '11 at 19:00










  • Unfortunately the content at the url above is now marked "This information is obsolete", but some of the links it contains still work.
    – Adrian K
    Apr 11 '17 at 21:49




















up vote
4
down vote













At last I found dBExForm. It's a GUI form editor for a number on SQL databases such as: Access, MsSql, MySql, Oracle, SQLite.



From the developer web site:
"Connect designer to database and get tables and fields direct from database. User or designer can drag and drop components fields and tables to the form. Simple edit form for single table will be ready in couple minutes. DBEXform helps to build small or large applications by creating forms, grids, reports, search, sorts and etc. features with couple clicks. More sophisticated solutions can be made with free hand designer powered with full programming capabilities in .NET Framework environment."



I tested it a little and it seems a good product. Unfortunately it is not cheap: 265USD.






share|improve this answer




























    up vote
    1
    down vote














    1. SQLite Maestro

    2. DataPro

    3. SQLPro


    And others.






    share|improve this answer

















    • 1




      Thank you Microfed, as explained above I'm not looking for a SQLite manager. I'm looking for a visual development tool as Microsoft Access with drag&drop visual controls, GUI editor, etc.
      – Nicero
      Nov 6 '11 at 19:01










    • I do not really understand what do you mean, but according to my knowledge, and Wikipedia, Microsoft Access is a relational database management system. SQLite Maestro is an analogue for SQLite. If it (Database Designer) is not GUI, what is it?:)
      – Microfed
      Nov 6 '11 at 19:13








    • 1




      @Microfed MS Access allows, among other things, custom forms and reports, macros, and embedded scripting ... pretty much everything to create an entire database-driven Application without ever leaving MS Access.
      – user166390
      Nov 6 '11 at 19:46




















    up vote
    1
    down vote













    I find sqlitebrowser in first of google search result.



    You can download it from here: http://sqlitebrowser.org/



    Some important features:




    • Free

    • Open source

    • Many platform support (windows, mac, linux)

    • Recently updated

    • Simple

    • Lightweight


    screenshot sqlitebrowser






    share|improve this answer




























      up vote
      0
      down vote













      I don't know of anything that will be as easy to use as FileMaker for creating a database front end. Therefore I have two suggestions.




      1. Use FileMaker and forget about SQLite. If you're using SQLite, you are probably not building a shared database system, and FileMaker would probably work for this. Is there a specific reason you're deciding on SQLite for your database storage?

      2. Use Real Studio. It isn't as easy to build reports with Real Studio as with FileMaker, but it can create a front-end to a SQLite system.






      share|improve this answer




























        up vote
        0
        down vote













        This could potentially be done with open office base. Check out https://wiki.openoffice.org/wiki/Documentation/How_Tos/Using_SQLite_With_OpenOffice.org



        All Open Source so it's free. I havn't gotten it working myself yet but this tutorial makes me believe it is possible.






        share|improve this answer




























          up vote
          0
          down vote













          So after a WHOLE lot of searchign and trying thiungs, I seem to be coming down to an old standard... Delphi.



          Delphi + SQLite + a visual manager seem to make a good substitute to Access that is cross paltform and doesnt require me to write VBA code.






          share|improve this answer




























            up vote
            0
            down vote













            Take a look at DBeaver, based on Eclipse.



            It is described as a free multi-platform database tool for developers, SQL programmers, database administrators and analysts.



            An Enterprise Edition version also supports non-JDBC datasources (WMI, MongoDB, Cassandra, Redis).



            A PPA for Ubuntu exists:



            sudo add-apt-repository ppa:serge-rider/dbeaver-ce
            sudo apt-get update
            sudo apt-get install dbeaver-ce





            share|improve this answer





















              Your Answer






              StackExchange.ifUsing("editor", function () {
              StackExchange.using("externalEditor", function () {
              StackExchange.using("snippets", function () {
              StackExchange.snippets.init();
              });
              });
              }, "code-snippets");

              StackExchange.ready(function() {
              var channelOptions = {
              tags: "".split(" "),
              id: "1"
              };
              initTagRenderer("".split(" "), "".split(" "), channelOptions);

              StackExchange.using("externalEditor", function() {
              // Have to fire editor after snippets, if snippets enabled
              if (StackExchange.settings.snippets.snippetsEnabled) {
              StackExchange.using("snippets", function() {
              createEditor();
              });
              }
              else {
              createEditor();
              }
              });

              function createEditor() {
              StackExchange.prepareEditor({
              heartbeatType: 'answer',
              convertImagesToLinks: true,
              noModals: true,
              showLowRepImageUploadWarning: true,
              reputationToPostImages: 10,
              bindNavPrevention: true,
              postfix: "",
              imageUploader: {
              brandingHtml: "Powered by u003ca class="icon-imgur-white" href="https://imgur.com/"u003eu003c/au003e",
              contentPolicyHtml: "User contributions licensed under u003ca href="https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/3.0/"u003ecc by-sa 3.0 with attribution requiredu003c/au003e u003ca href="https://stackoverflow.com/legal/content-policy"u003e(content policy)u003c/au003e",
              allowUrls: true
              },
              onDemand: true,
              discardSelector: ".discard-answer"
              ,immediatelyShowMarkdownHelp:true
              });


              }
              });














               

              draft saved


              draft discarded


















              StackExchange.ready(
              function () {
              StackExchange.openid.initPostLogin('.new-post-login', 'https%3a%2f%2fstackoverflow.com%2fquestions%2f8029318%2fdo-you-know-any-sqlite-visual-develoment-tool%23new-answer', 'question_page');
              }
              );

              Post as a guest















              Required, but never shown

























              8 Answers
              8






              active

              oldest

              votes








              8 Answers
              8






              active

              oldest

              votes









              active

              oldest

              votes






              active

              oldest

              votes








              up vote
              7
              down vote













              There's a list of them at http://www.sqlite.org/cvstrac/wiki?p=ManagementTools






              share|improve this answer

















              • 2




                Thank you rushman, but I'm not looking for a SQLite manager. I'm looking for a visual depelopment tools as Microsoft Access.
                – Nicero
                Nov 6 '11 at 18:53










              • I think the title of the article I provided my be misleading. SQLite Maestro seems to be a complete development tool as well as a management tool, for instance.
                – rushman
                Nov 6 '11 at 19:00










              • Unfortunately the content at the url above is now marked "This information is obsolete", but some of the links it contains still work.
                – Adrian K
                Apr 11 '17 at 21:49

















              up vote
              7
              down vote













              There's a list of them at http://www.sqlite.org/cvstrac/wiki?p=ManagementTools






              share|improve this answer

















              • 2




                Thank you rushman, but I'm not looking for a SQLite manager. I'm looking for a visual depelopment tools as Microsoft Access.
                – Nicero
                Nov 6 '11 at 18:53










              • I think the title of the article I provided my be misleading. SQLite Maestro seems to be a complete development tool as well as a management tool, for instance.
                – rushman
                Nov 6 '11 at 19:00










              • Unfortunately the content at the url above is now marked "This information is obsolete", but some of the links it contains still work.
                – Adrian K
                Apr 11 '17 at 21:49















              up vote
              7
              down vote










              up vote
              7
              down vote









              There's a list of them at http://www.sqlite.org/cvstrac/wiki?p=ManagementTools






              share|improve this answer












              There's a list of them at http://www.sqlite.org/cvstrac/wiki?p=ManagementTools







              share|improve this answer












              share|improve this answer



              share|improve this answer










              answered Nov 6 '11 at 18:32









              rushman

              45727




              45727








              • 2




                Thank you rushman, but I'm not looking for a SQLite manager. I'm looking for a visual depelopment tools as Microsoft Access.
                – Nicero
                Nov 6 '11 at 18:53










              • I think the title of the article I provided my be misleading. SQLite Maestro seems to be a complete development tool as well as a management tool, for instance.
                – rushman
                Nov 6 '11 at 19:00










              • Unfortunately the content at the url above is now marked "This information is obsolete", but some of the links it contains still work.
                – Adrian K
                Apr 11 '17 at 21:49
















              • 2




                Thank you rushman, but I'm not looking for a SQLite manager. I'm looking for a visual depelopment tools as Microsoft Access.
                – Nicero
                Nov 6 '11 at 18:53










              • I think the title of the article I provided my be misleading. SQLite Maestro seems to be a complete development tool as well as a management tool, for instance.
                – rushman
                Nov 6 '11 at 19:00










              • Unfortunately the content at the url above is now marked "This information is obsolete", but some of the links it contains still work.
                – Adrian K
                Apr 11 '17 at 21:49










              2




              2




              Thank you rushman, but I'm not looking for a SQLite manager. I'm looking for a visual depelopment tools as Microsoft Access.
              – Nicero
              Nov 6 '11 at 18:53




              Thank you rushman, but I'm not looking for a SQLite manager. I'm looking for a visual depelopment tools as Microsoft Access.
              – Nicero
              Nov 6 '11 at 18:53












              I think the title of the article I provided my be misleading. SQLite Maestro seems to be a complete development tool as well as a management tool, for instance.
              – rushman
              Nov 6 '11 at 19:00




              I think the title of the article I provided my be misleading. SQLite Maestro seems to be a complete development tool as well as a management tool, for instance.
              – rushman
              Nov 6 '11 at 19:00












              Unfortunately the content at the url above is now marked "This information is obsolete", but some of the links it contains still work.
              – Adrian K
              Apr 11 '17 at 21:49






              Unfortunately the content at the url above is now marked "This information is obsolete", but some of the links it contains still work.
              – Adrian K
              Apr 11 '17 at 21:49














              up vote
              4
              down vote













              At last I found dBExForm. It's a GUI form editor for a number on SQL databases such as: Access, MsSql, MySql, Oracle, SQLite.



              From the developer web site:
              "Connect designer to database and get tables and fields direct from database. User or designer can drag and drop components fields and tables to the form. Simple edit form for single table will be ready in couple minutes. DBEXform helps to build small or large applications by creating forms, grids, reports, search, sorts and etc. features with couple clicks. More sophisticated solutions can be made with free hand designer powered with full programming capabilities in .NET Framework environment."



              I tested it a little and it seems a good product. Unfortunately it is not cheap: 265USD.






              share|improve this answer

























                up vote
                4
                down vote













                At last I found dBExForm. It's a GUI form editor for a number on SQL databases such as: Access, MsSql, MySql, Oracle, SQLite.



                From the developer web site:
                "Connect designer to database and get tables and fields direct from database. User or designer can drag and drop components fields and tables to the form. Simple edit form for single table will be ready in couple minutes. DBEXform helps to build small or large applications by creating forms, grids, reports, search, sorts and etc. features with couple clicks. More sophisticated solutions can be made with free hand designer powered with full programming capabilities in .NET Framework environment."



                I tested it a little and it seems a good product. Unfortunately it is not cheap: 265USD.






                share|improve this answer























                  up vote
                  4
                  down vote










                  up vote
                  4
                  down vote









                  At last I found dBExForm. It's a GUI form editor for a number on SQL databases such as: Access, MsSql, MySql, Oracle, SQLite.



                  From the developer web site:
                  "Connect designer to database and get tables and fields direct from database. User or designer can drag and drop components fields and tables to the form. Simple edit form for single table will be ready in couple minutes. DBEXform helps to build small or large applications by creating forms, grids, reports, search, sorts and etc. features with couple clicks. More sophisticated solutions can be made with free hand designer powered with full programming capabilities in .NET Framework environment."



                  I tested it a little and it seems a good product. Unfortunately it is not cheap: 265USD.






                  share|improve this answer












                  At last I found dBExForm. It's a GUI form editor for a number on SQL databases such as: Access, MsSql, MySql, Oracle, SQLite.



                  From the developer web site:
                  "Connect designer to database and get tables and fields direct from database. User or designer can drag and drop components fields and tables to the form. Simple edit form for single table will be ready in couple minutes. DBEXform helps to build small or large applications by creating forms, grids, reports, search, sorts and etc. features with couple clicks. More sophisticated solutions can be made with free hand designer powered with full programming capabilities in .NET Framework environment."



                  I tested it a little and it seems a good product. Unfortunately it is not cheap: 265USD.







                  share|improve this answer












                  share|improve this answer



                  share|improve this answer










                  answered Jan 9 '12 at 15:35









                  Nicero

                  1,51742040




                  1,51742040






















                      up vote
                      1
                      down vote














                      1. SQLite Maestro

                      2. DataPro

                      3. SQLPro


                      And others.






                      share|improve this answer

















                      • 1




                        Thank you Microfed, as explained above I'm not looking for a SQLite manager. I'm looking for a visual development tool as Microsoft Access with drag&drop visual controls, GUI editor, etc.
                        – Nicero
                        Nov 6 '11 at 19:01










                      • I do not really understand what do you mean, but according to my knowledge, and Wikipedia, Microsoft Access is a relational database management system. SQLite Maestro is an analogue for SQLite. If it (Database Designer) is not GUI, what is it?:)
                        – Microfed
                        Nov 6 '11 at 19:13








                      • 1




                        @Microfed MS Access allows, among other things, custom forms and reports, macros, and embedded scripting ... pretty much everything to create an entire database-driven Application without ever leaving MS Access.
                        – user166390
                        Nov 6 '11 at 19:46

















                      up vote
                      1
                      down vote














                      1. SQLite Maestro

                      2. DataPro

                      3. SQLPro


                      And others.






                      share|improve this answer

















                      • 1




                        Thank you Microfed, as explained above I'm not looking for a SQLite manager. I'm looking for a visual development tool as Microsoft Access with drag&drop visual controls, GUI editor, etc.
                        – Nicero
                        Nov 6 '11 at 19:01










                      • I do not really understand what do you mean, but according to my knowledge, and Wikipedia, Microsoft Access is a relational database management system. SQLite Maestro is an analogue for SQLite. If it (Database Designer) is not GUI, what is it?:)
                        – Microfed
                        Nov 6 '11 at 19:13








                      • 1




                        @Microfed MS Access allows, among other things, custom forms and reports, macros, and embedded scripting ... pretty much everything to create an entire database-driven Application without ever leaving MS Access.
                        – user166390
                        Nov 6 '11 at 19:46















                      up vote
                      1
                      down vote










                      up vote
                      1
                      down vote










                      1. SQLite Maestro

                      2. DataPro

                      3. SQLPro


                      And others.






                      share|improve this answer













                      1. SQLite Maestro

                      2. DataPro

                      3. SQLPro


                      And others.







                      share|improve this answer












                      share|improve this answer



                      share|improve this answer










                      answered Nov 6 '11 at 18:32









                      Microfed

                      1,9691423




                      1,9691423








                      • 1




                        Thank you Microfed, as explained above I'm not looking for a SQLite manager. I'm looking for a visual development tool as Microsoft Access with drag&drop visual controls, GUI editor, etc.
                        – Nicero
                        Nov 6 '11 at 19:01










                      • I do not really understand what do you mean, but according to my knowledge, and Wikipedia, Microsoft Access is a relational database management system. SQLite Maestro is an analogue for SQLite. If it (Database Designer) is not GUI, what is it?:)
                        – Microfed
                        Nov 6 '11 at 19:13








                      • 1




                        @Microfed MS Access allows, among other things, custom forms and reports, macros, and embedded scripting ... pretty much everything to create an entire database-driven Application without ever leaving MS Access.
                        – user166390
                        Nov 6 '11 at 19:46
















                      • 1




                        Thank you Microfed, as explained above I'm not looking for a SQLite manager. I'm looking for a visual development tool as Microsoft Access with drag&drop visual controls, GUI editor, etc.
                        – Nicero
                        Nov 6 '11 at 19:01










                      • I do not really understand what do you mean, but according to my knowledge, and Wikipedia, Microsoft Access is a relational database management system. SQLite Maestro is an analogue for SQLite. If it (Database Designer) is not GUI, what is it?:)
                        – Microfed
                        Nov 6 '11 at 19:13








                      • 1




                        @Microfed MS Access allows, among other things, custom forms and reports, macros, and embedded scripting ... pretty much everything to create an entire database-driven Application without ever leaving MS Access.
                        – user166390
                        Nov 6 '11 at 19:46










                      1




                      1




                      Thank you Microfed, as explained above I'm not looking for a SQLite manager. I'm looking for a visual development tool as Microsoft Access with drag&drop visual controls, GUI editor, etc.
                      – Nicero
                      Nov 6 '11 at 19:01




                      Thank you Microfed, as explained above I'm not looking for a SQLite manager. I'm looking for a visual development tool as Microsoft Access with drag&drop visual controls, GUI editor, etc.
                      – Nicero
                      Nov 6 '11 at 19:01












                      I do not really understand what do you mean, but according to my knowledge, and Wikipedia, Microsoft Access is a relational database management system. SQLite Maestro is an analogue for SQLite. If it (Database Designer) is not GUI, what is it?:)
                      – Microfed
                      Nov 6 '11 at 19:13






                      I do not really understand what do you mean, but according to my knowledge, and Wikipedia, Microsoft Access is a relational database management system. SQLite Maestro is an analogue for SQLite. If it (Database Designer) is not GUI, what is it?:)
                      – Microfed
                      Nov 6 '11 at 19:13






                      1




                      1




                      @Microfed MS Access allows, among other things, custom forms and reports, macros, and embedded scripting ... pretty much everything to create an entire database-driven Application without ever leaving MS Access.
                      – user166390
                      Nov 6 '11 at 19:46






                      @Microfed MS Access allows, among other things, custom forms and reports, macros, and embedded scripting ... pretty much everything to create an entire database-driven Application without ever leaving MS Access.
                      – user166390
                      Nov 6 '11 at 19:46












                      up vote
                      1
                      down vote













                      I find sqlitebrowser in first of google search result.



                      You can download it from here: http://sqlitebrowser.org/



                      Some important features:




                      • Free

                      • Open source

                      • Many platform support (windows, mac, linux)

                      • Recently updated

                      • Simple

                      • Lightweight


                      screenshot sqlitebrowser






                      share|improve this answer

























                        up vote
                        1
                        down vote













                        I find sqlitebrowser in first of google search result.



                        You can download it from here: http://sqlitebrowser.org/



                        Some important features:




                        • Free

                        • Open source

                        • Many platform support (windows, mac, linux)

                        • Recently updated

                        • Simple

                        • Lightweight


                        screenshot sqlitebrowser






                        share|improve this answer























                          up vote
                          1
                          down vote










                          up vote
                          1
                          down vote









                          I find sqlitebrowser in first of google search result.



                          You can download it from here: http://sqlitebrowser.org/



                          Some important features:




                          • Free

                          • Open source

                          • Many platform support (windows, mac, linux)

                          • Recently updated

                          • Simple

                          • Lightweight


                          screenshot sqlitebrowser






                          share|improve this answer












                          I find sqlitebrowser in first of google search result.



                          You can download it from here: http://sqlitebrowser.org/



                          Some important features:




                          • Free

                          • Open source

                          • Many platform support (windows, mac, linux)

                          • Recently updated

                          • Simple

                          • Lightweight


                          screenshot sqlitebrowser







                          share|improve this answer












                          share|improve this answer



                          share|improve this answer










                          answered Nov 2 '17 at 1:27









                          Nabi K.A.Z.

                          2,28612036




                          2,28612036






















                              up vote
                              0
                              down vote













                              I don't know of anything that will be as easy to use as FileMaker for creating a database front end. Therefore I have two suggestions.




                              1. Use FileMaker and forget about SQLite. If you're using SQLite, you are probably not building a shared database system, and FileMaker would probably work for this. Is there a specific reason you're deciding on SQLite for your database storage?

                              2. Use Real Studio. It isn't as easy to build reports with Real Studio as with FileMaker, but it can create a front-end to a SQLite system.






                              share|improve this answer

























                                up vote
                                0
                                down vote













                                I don't know of anything that will be as easy to use as FileMaker for creating a database front end. Therefore I have two suggestions.




                                1. Use FileMaker and forget about SQLite. If you're using SQLite, you are probably not building a shared database system, and FileMaker would probably work for this. Is there a specific reason you're deciding on SQLite for your database storage?

                                2. Use Real Studio. It isn't as easy to build reports with Real Studio as with FileMaker, but it can create a front-end to a SQLite system.






                                share|improve this answer























                                  up vote
                                  0
                                  down vote










                                  up vote
                                  0
                                  down vote









                                  I don't know of anything that will be as easy to use as FileMaker for creating a database front end. Therefore I have two suggestions.




                                  1. Use FileMaker and forget about SQLite. If you're using SQLite, you are probably not building a shared database system, and FileMaker would probably work for this. Is there a specific reason you're deciding on SQLite for your database storage?

                                  2. Use Real Studio. It isn't as easy to build reports with Real Studio as with FileMaker, but it can create a front-end to a SQLite system.






                                  share|improve this answer












                                  I don't know of anything that will be as easy to use as FileMaker for creating a database front end. Therefore I have two suggestions.




                                  1. Use FileMaker and forget about SQLite. If you're using SQLite, you are probably not building a shared database system, and FileMaker would probably work for this. Is there a specific reason you're deciding on SQLite for your database storage?

                                  2. Use Real Studio. It isn't as easy to build reports with Real Studio as with FileMaker, but it can create a front-end to a SQLite system.







                                  share|improve this answer












                                  share|improve this answer



                                  share|improve this answer










                                  answered Nov 9 '11 at 17:30









                                  Chuck

                                  3,14611737




                                  3,14611737






















                                      up vote
                                      0
                                      down vote













                                      This could potentially be done with open office base. Check out https://wiki.openoffice.org/wiki/Documentation/How_Tos/Using_SQLite_With_OpenOffice.org



                                      All Open Source so it's free. I havn't gotten it working myself yet but this tutorial makes me believe it is possible.






                                      share|improve this answer

























                                        up vote
                                        0
                                        down vote













                                        This could potentially be done with open office base. Check out https://wiki.openoffice.org/wiki/Documentation/How_Tos/Using_SQLite_With_OpenOffice.org



                                        All Open Source so it's free. I havn't gotten it working myself yet but this tutorial makes me believe it is possible.






                                        share|improve this answer























                                          up vote
                                          0
                                          down vote










                                          up vote
                                          0
                                          down vote









                                          This could potentially be done with open office base. Check out https://wiki.openoffice.org/wiki/Documentation/How_Tos/Using_SQLite_With_OpenOffice.org



                                          All Open Source so it's free. I havn't gotten it working myself yet but this tutorial makes me believe it is possible.






                                          share|improve this answer












                                          This could potentially be done with open office base. Check out https://wiki.openoffice.org/wiki/Documentation/How_Tos/Using_SQLite_With_OpenOffice.org



                                          All Open Source so it's free. I havn't gotten it working myself yet but this tutorial makes me believe it is possible.







                                          share|improve this answer












                                          share|improve this answer



                                          share|improve this answer










                                          answered Dec 2 '15 at 18:11









                                          danielson317

                                          1,75611230




                                          1,75611230






















                                              up vote
                                              0
                                              down vote













                                              So after a WHOLE lot of searchign and trying thiungs, I seem to be coming down to an old standard... Delphi.



                                              Delphi + SQLite + a visual manager seem to make a good substitute to Access that is cross paltform and doesnt require me to write VBA code.






                                              share|improve this answer

























                                                up vote
                                                0
                                                down vote













                                                So after a WHOLE lot of searchign and trying thiungs, I seem to be coming down to an old standard... Delphi.



                                                Delphi + SQLite + a visual manager seem to make a good substitute to Access that is cross paltform and doesnt require me to write VBA code.






                                                share|improve this answer























                                                  up vote
                                                  0
                                                  down vote










                                                  up vote
                                                  0
                                                  down vote









                                                  So after a WHOLE lot of searchign and trying thiungs, I seem to be coming down to an old standard... Delphi.



                                                  Delphi + SQLite + a visual manager seem to make a good substitute to Access that is cross paltform and doesnt require me to write VBA code.






                                                  share|improve this answer












                                                  So after a WHOLE lot of searchign and trying thiungs, I seem to be coming down to an old standard... Delphi.



                                                  Delphi + SQLite + a visual manager seem to make a good substitute to Access that is cross paltform and doesnt require me to write VBA code.







                                                  share|improve this answer












                                                  share|improve this answer



                                                  share|improve this answer










                                                  answered Aug 8 at 21:21









                                                  Jeffrey Kesselman

                                                  17116




                                                  17116






















                                                      up vote
                                                      0
                                                      down vote













                                                      Take a look at DBeaver, based on Eclipse.



                                                      It is described as a free multi-platform database tool for developers, SQL programmers, database administrators and analysts.



                                                      An Enterprise Edition version also supports non-JDBC datasources (WMI, MongoDB, Cassandra, Redis).



                                                      A PPA for Ubuntu exists:



                                                      sudo add-apt-repository ppa:serge-rider/dbeaver-ce
                                                      sudo apt-get update
                                                      sudo apt-get install dbeaver-ce





                                                      share|improve this answer

























                                                        up vote
                                                        0
                                                        down vote













                                                        Take a look at DBeaver, based on Eclipse.



                                                        It is described as a free multi-platform database tool for developers, SQL programmers, database administrators and analysts.



                                                        An Enterprise Edition version also supports non-JDBC datasources (WMI, MongoDB, Cassandra, Redis).



                                                        A PPA for Ubuntu exists:



                                                        sudo add-apt-repository ppa:serge-rider/dbeaver-ce
                                                        sudo apt-get update
                                                        sudo apt-get install dbeaver-ce





                                                        share|improve this answer























                                                          up vote
                                                          0
                                                          down vote










                                                          up vote
                                                          0
                                                          down vote









                                                          Take a look at DBeaver, based on Eclipse.



                                                          It is described as a free multi-platform database tool for developers, SQL programmers, database administrators and analysts.



                                                          An Enterprise Edition version also supports non-JDBC datasources (WMI, MongoDB, Cassandra, Redis).



                                                          A PPA for Ubuntu exists:



                                                          sudo add-apt-repository ppa:serge-rider/dbeaver-ce
                                                          sudo apt-get update
                                                          sudo apt-get install dbeaver-ce





                                                          share|improve this answer












                                                          Take a look at DBeaver, based on Eclipse.



                                                          It is described as a free multi-platform database tool for developers, SQL programmers, database administrators and analysts.



                                                          An Enterprise Edition version also supports non-JDBC datasources (WMI, MongoDB, Cassandra, Redis).



                                                          A PPA for Ubuntu exists:



                                                          sudo add-apt-repository ppa:serge-rider/dbeaver-ce
                                                          sudo apt-get update
                                                          sudo apt-get install dbeaver-ce






                                                          share|improve this answer












                                                          share|improve this answer



                                                          share|improve this answer










                                                          answered Nov 10 at 20:38









                                                          smonff

                                                          2,33312837




                                                          2,33312837






























                                                               

                                                              draft saved


                                                              draft discarded



















































                                                               


                                                              draft saved


                                                              draft discarded














                                                              StackExchange.ready(
                                                              function () {
                                                              StackExchange.openid.initPostLogin('.new-post-login', 'https%3a%2f%2fstackoverflow.com%2fquestions%2f8029318%2fdo-you-know-any-sqlite-visual-develoment-tool%23new-answer', 'question_page');
                                                              }
                                                              );

                                                              Post as a guest















                                                              Required, but never shown





















































                                                              Required, but never shown














                                                              Required, but never shown












                                                              Required, but never shown







                                                              Required, but never shown

































                                                              Required, but never shown














                                                              Required, but never shown












                                                              Required, but never shown







                                                              Required, but never shown







                                                              Popular posts from this blog

                                                              Xamarin.iOS Cant Deploy on Iphone

                                                              Glorious Revolution

                                                              Dulmage-Mendelsohn matrix decomposition in Python